Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kid in at what is regarded as one of the best SLACs (think Amherst, Williams, Pomona level) but wants to go to his top 15 SLAC with merit. I can’t deal. Was complaining that he did not get into any reaches after RD and now gets in to an elite school and won’t go. I said I didn’t care about the merit.
There’s no top 15 with merit. Name one top-15 with merit.
At a merit college, the kid can be a big fish in a smaller pond. That can do wonders for confidence.
I'm curious which top 15 SLAC isn't "elite".
Davidson is a top 15 SLAC that offers aid.
Despite what posters think about it, W&L is elite and offers merit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kid in at what is regarded as one of the best SLACs (think Amherst, Williams, Pomona level) but wants to go to his top 15 SLAC with merit. I can’t deal. Was complaining that he did not get into any reaches after RD and now gets in to an elite school and won’t go. I said I didn’t care about the merit.
There’s no top 15 with merit. Name one top-15 with merit.
At a merit college, the kid can be a big fish in a smaller pond. That can do wonders for confidence.
I'm curious which top 15 SLAC isn't "elite".
Davidson is a top 15 SLAC that offers aid.
Anonymous wrote:Kid in at what is regarded as one of the best SLACs (think Amherst, Williams, Pomona level) but wants to go to his top 15 SLAC with merit. I can’t deal. Was complaining that he did not get into any reaches after RD and now gets in to an elite school and won’t go. I said I didn’t care about the merit.
Anonymous wrote:Ugh. The OP is the worst of DCUM - only worried about rankings and prestige, not about actual fit and preference. Poor kid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I will give the opposite advice. Similar situation with both college and law school and I thought I knew it all and chose the lower ranked schools. I have a great career but I have always had to explain myself in an elitist town. I wish my parents would have put their feet down.
Except kids who choose SLACs aren’t always the legal types. I think you don’t really understand SLAC. They don’t necessarily choose to chase $$$$$.
Elitism is not necessarily about money in DC!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I will give the opposite advice. Similar situation with both college and law school and I thought I knew it all and chose the lower ranked schools. I have a great career but I have always had to explain myself in an elitist town. I wish my parents would have put their feet down.
Except kids who choose SLACs aren’t always the legal types. I think you don’t really understand SLAC. They don’t necessarily choose to chase $$$$$.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I will give the opposite advice. Similar situation with both college and law school and I thought I knew it all and chose the lower ranked schools. I have a great career but I have always had to explain myself in an elitist town. I wish my parents would have put their feet down.
I'm sorry PP but grammatically that sentence is a disaster zone - I don't believe you got into a high prestige college, at any point, ever.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kid in at what is regarded as one of the best SLACs (think Amherst, Williams, Pomona level) but wants to go to his top 15 SLAC with merit. I can’t deal. Was complaining that he did not get into any reaches after RD and now gets in to an elite school and won’t go. I said I didn’t care about the merit.
There’s no top 15 with merit. Name one top-15 with merit.
At a merit college, the kid can be a big fish in a smaller pond. That can do wonders for confidence.
Anonymous wrote:I will give the opposite advice. Similar situation with both college and law school and I thought I knew it all and chose the lower ranked schools. I have a great career but I have always had to explain myself in an elitist town. I wish my parents would have put their feet down.
Anonymous wrote:I will give the opposite advice. Similar situation with both college and law school and I thought I knew it all and chose the lower ranked schools. I have a great career but I have always had to explain myself in an elitist town. I wish my parents would have put their feet down.
Anonymous wrote:I got into a very prestigious school that would have cost nothing. I chose a school that was not nearly as prestigious and cost a little bit but was almost totally covered. My parents were disappointed at first with my choice but they really did not harp on it, and they allowed me to make that choice. I look back today and think about how different my life would be - but not in a bad way. I have a perfectly great career and am a fully functioning, happy adult. I think about how the friends I made wouldn’t be in my life and I wouldn’t have had certain experiences and memories I cherish.
Let your kid decide his future.